America Letter: Irish-American echo of Clinton’s union tie-up

Hillary Clinton’s wooing of unions recalls power of late labour leader Mike Quill

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton: local unions  see Clinton as the more electable compared with socialist senator Bernie Sanders, despite her new-found opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Photograph:  John Taggart/EPA
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton: local unions see Clinton as the more electable compared with socialist senator Bernie Sanders, despite her new-found opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Photograph: John Taggart/EPA

Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential frontrunner, has been hitching her wagon to the American labour movement as she tries to corral votes away from her rival, socialist senator Bernie Sanders.

In a new campaign ad this week, Clinton highlighted her appreciation for the host of national trade unions who have endorsed her.

The alliance seems strange, given that Sanders’s policies appear to be more closely aligned with the kind of fights unions take on. Certainly, local unions are enthusiastic about Sanders, but nationally they clearly see Clinton as the more electable, despite her newfound opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the free trade deal she backed in Barack Obama’s cabinet, which unions see as a job killer.

The messaging fits in with Clinton’s broader manifesto of being the champion of the American middle class. She knows, like all smart politicians, that the support of big-union leaders can be critical in shoring up votes on the Democratic Party’s left flank.

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Anniversary

This month marks the 50th anniversary of the death of a prominent Irish-American who also understood the power of aligning the labour movement with other causes in American politics.

Michael Joseph Quill

, a native of Kilgarvan, Co Kerry, and a dispatch rider for the IRA during the War of Independence, emigrated to the US in 1926. He went on to establish the Transport Workers Union of America (TWU) to represent New York City’s subway workers and, later, other transit workers.

Quill led a 12-day strike against the city in 1966 after clashing with its mayor, John Lindsay. The Kerry-born union leader stopped the world’s largest subway and bus system, which served eight million people. Despite a spell in jail for contempt of court after breaching a judge’s injunction, Quill and his union secured a large pay rise.

The victory celebrations were shortlived for the union leader; he died of a heart attack at the age of 60, three days after the union’s success.

Limerick historian Brian Hanley, in an intriguing article for History Ireland magazine in 2004, wrote about why one of the most generous tributes to the Irish-American union leader came from a significant American public figure: civil rights leader Martin Luther King jnr.

Extolling Quill as “a man the ages will remember”, King hailed him as a “fighter for decent things all his life: Irish independence, labour organisation and racial equality”. He praised him for being “bold enough and tough enough” to speak out about racial discrimination when others wouldn’t.

"Negroes had desperately needed men like Mike Quill who fearlessly said what was true even when it offended. That is why Negroes shall miss Mike Quill," said King in his tribute.

The Kerryman’s union promised at the outset to organise for all workers in the transit industry “regardless of race, creed, colour or nationality”. In the 1950s, Quill organised support for the campaign against racial segregation, raising funds to pay bail for those arrested while attempting to desegregate restaurants in the American South.

Great risk

Hanley writes that Quill supported racial equality at great risk to his popularity, at least in part because of his conception of Irish republicanism and the influence of the Communist Party’s anti-racism on him. During a visit to Dublin in 1938, Quill spoke of his American experience and how transport employers had exploited religious and racial divisions to undermine workers.

“If we, black and white, Catholic and non-Catholic, Jew and gentile, are good enough to slave and sweat together, then we are good enough to unite and fight together,” he said.

His union, which today has a largely black, Hispanic and immigrant membership, still celebrates its Irish origins half a century after Quill's death. It holds an annual James Connolly event in March every year.

The strong political ties between Irish groups and the American labour movement continue to this day. Irish American Democrats, a group strongly backing Clinton this year, is hosting a centenary event in Washington in March to commemorate the financial support provided by US organised labour to the 1916 Easter Rising.

The speakers at the event include three Irish-American presidents of three major American unions: Sean McGarvey, president of North America's Building Trade Unions; Leitrim native Jim Boland, president of the bricklayers' union; and Terry O'Sullivan, general president of the Labourers' International Union of North America, who is a major supporter of Friends of Sinn Féin and close to Gerry Adams.

There may even be “principals” from the Clinton campaign at the event, one source said, with US public figures and the Irish-American labour leaders once again joining forces, just like in Quill’s day.